Indiana Palladium, Volume 3, Number 18, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 12 May 1827 — Page 2
Waind; and stand them straight up and dftwu if you please. Let go with your I ft hand and take hold with your right just below the guard. Steuben says the gun must be held p, e, v,pcrlicler yes, you must always mind and hold your guns vcrj pertic'ler. Now boys 'tention ihe whole ! Present arms! Very handsomely done ! hold the guns over t'other knee; t'other hand up turn your hands thus a little, and raise thern up higher draw the other foot back! Now you are nearly right very well do ae, gentlemen; you Jihvc improved vastly since I first saw
you: you are getting too slick for tallar! hat a charming thing it is to see men fandcr good discipline! Now gentlemen, 'We come to the revolutions but, Lord, men, you have t;ot all in a sort of a snarl 5 I may say ; how did you get all so like such a higglety pigglety? The fact was, the shade had moved considerably to the Eastward, and had exposed the right wing of these hardy Telcrans to a galling fire of the sun. Being but poorly provided with umbrclhs al this end of the line, they found it convenient to follow the shade, and in huddling to the left for this purpose, h.id changed the figure of their line from thai of a crescent to one wich more nearly re sembled a pair of pot-hooks. "Come, gentlemen, (says the Captain) spread yourselves out again into a : -l- . I- it. .1 straight line, and let us get into the wheelings and other matters as soon as possible." But this was strenuously opposed by the soldiers. Tney objected going into these revolutions at all, insomuch as the "Weather was extremely hot, they already had been kept in the field upwards of three quarters of an hour. They reminded the Captain of hU requested promise to be as short as he possibly could, and it was clear he could dispense with all this same wheelingand flourishing if he chose; "Fby were already very thirsty, and if he would ,o't dismiss them, they declared tho) would go off without dismission and got something to drink, and he might fine them if that would do him any good ; they were able to pay their ti.n , but
could not go without dnnl: to please any-for cultivation. Th balance, it is bebody: and they swore they would neverijiovrd, is i,ot inferior to any part of the
vote tor another captain who wished to do so unreasonably strict. Une ot the !Tlen was so insolent as to exclaim, "111 not be dragged about here any longer,
you know I'm as ejood a9 you any day, I inhabitant-, they now contain a populaCanbiiytwo of you.'7 I fion of more than 20.000 soul and the The Captaiu behaved with great spir- ratio of increase h not diminishing, it on this occasion, and a smart colloquy j These considerations reader it important ensued; when becorni .g exasperated 'that no time should he lost in acquaintto. the last degree, he roundly averted j intj ourselves with the capabilities of thai no soldier ought to think hard of thsi White River for aif.rdinjr an outlet for
orders of nis officers; and finally he wentjthe exportation of the productions of cur
So fa r a to sa) ;uai ut; uiu nui uimw any ,
gentlemen on that ground had any just : derived from the road to be made from Cause to- ie offended with him. The dis-! lake Michigan to the Ohio; but, from !uto was finally settled v ihe Captain's'the various windings and branches of sending for some grog Tor their present; White River, the improvement of that accommodation, and agreeing to omitjstream wouid accommodate a much larreading toe military law, a3 directed by gf.r population. There arc but two a late act, and aho all the m hlarv ma- natural falls in its whole course, one fioeuvres, ex. ept two or ihree such easy seven miles above Martinsville of 18 and shook; o..es a? should be performed inches, the other ten miles above its juncwithiu tiiecompMSS of the shade. After! (ion with the East Fork, of about ' nine
they had drank their grog, and had spread ihemselve, they were divided: into platoons. ''Tention the whole! zshetl! each man faced about.. To the to the right ngai t v H irentlemenl I did'nt meen for
every man to stand still and turn himself from 10 to fifteen feet high, and comTimturally rigid round; but when I told plotely obstructs ihe navigation excep! right, I intended for yo i to;in high vater. It has been formed by a wheel round to the right as it were. oew channel or cut off 3-4 of a mile Ion:;
1 lease totrv that again, gentlemen ; everyiacross a bend which is estimated to be
rigiu hand man must stand fast, and only the others turn rouud. f; a previous part of the exercise, it had for the purpose of sizisi0;, lu'n neccv sary to denominate everv second p(iron a right hand man. A very natural consequence was, lhat, on the pivs;int occasion the rip;ht hand men maintained their position, all the intermediate ones facing about as before. Why, fi.ik at 'em now! exclaimed the Caotaia in extreme vexation; I'll be dara'd if you can understand a word I say. Excuserje, gentleme,., -jut it raxjty ssom as if you could aot come at ii exactly. In wheeling to the rini, tho riht ba id eendof the platoons stand fast, and the other rend comes round like a swingletrce, them on the outside mu.-t m irth faster than them on the inside and them on lheinsidt no? near so fast as them on the outside. You sartinly must understand me now gentlemen, and now please to li s once more. By thr; help of a non-commissioned officer in front of each platoon, they tv heeled this time with tolerable regularilv. i N w, my boys, you must try to wheel by divisions; and there is one thing in particular, wnich I have to request of you, gentlem 1 . and it is this, not to make any blunder i your wheeling distance, and not talk in the ranks or get out of size a:;am; fori want you to do this motion well, and not make any blunder now. 'Tention the whole! By divisions to the rigut wheel! march. In this they were somewhat mpre successful. Tenlion the vlnle! To thzfrfllcft,
no right that is, the left I mean ihe right left wheel! march! fn this he was strictly obeyed, some wheeled to the right, left, or both ways. Stop! halt! let us try again! I could not just then tell my right hand from my left'! You must excuse me, gentlemen, if you please, experience makes perfect, as the saying is; long as I have served, I find something new to larn every day, but all's one for that. Now gentlemen, do that motion. In doing this, it seemed as if bedlam had broke loose; every man look the command. Not so fast on the right! Slow now slow now! Haul down them umbrellas! Faster on the
left! Keep back a little there! Don't crowd so! Hold up your gun, Sam! Go faster there, faster! Who trod on m ,J your Luffs! Keep back krepback! Stop us, Captain, do stop us! Go faster there! I've lost my shoe! Get up again, Ned ! halt halt halt ! Stop stop d it, I say, can't )ou stop? By this time they got into utter and inexplicable confusion, and so I left them. TOPOG RA P I IIC A L. The West Fork of White river rises in Randolph county near the Ohio line, 30 miles north and seventv east of this place. It Hows in a smooth hut rapid current in nearly a western direction for fifty miles, thence it turns S. S. W. and its general I . . . . course is much the same to its entrance into the Wabash. It may be navigated in high water from its mouth to Sample's mill, near Winchester, which including windings, is computed to be a distance of 405 miles, as follows: From the Wabash to the Forks of While river, 40 miles; thence to Indianapolis 245 miles; thence to the head of navigation, 120 miles. Its breadth from this place to its mouth varies from 80 to 120 yards; at Aederson Town it is 50, and at Sample's mill, only 10 yards broad. Between 7 and 8,000 square miles of territory are watered by the West Fork of White River and its branches; of which territory there may be 200 square miles in Morgan and Monroe counties too hilly, and an equal amount in other parts too wet western country in h-auty of situation and fertility of soil. i lil eight upper counties in this dirict onlv six ye;ir since were almost entirely without whitt soil. Much advantage will no doubt ne frot in a distance of a hundred yards. I here have been other considerable ob structions by rafts or bridges of driftwood. all of which have been removed by high water but one, near the Daviess and Greene county line. This raft is comouled to be 0 vards loner, 50 broad, nnrl six miles ton .d. Toe expense of removinq this with other obstructions in the river so as to reader the navigation with skilful pilotage tolerably safe for the whale distance, was estimated by the late Mr. RtNto a, (from whose report we have obtained several of the fore(Toi:in statements) not to exceed ,Q 1.500. T e most considerable branches of the West For!; are V.v river, 50 yards wide and 100 mile in length; Fall creek 30 yards wide and 75 -niies in length: Dean Blossom, W.aite Lick, Stott's, Ivtgle, and Cicero creeks. Indiana Journal. From Drake $: Mansfield's ''Cincinnati in l S-2C."' OHIO RIVER. The Ohio, which is frned by the union of the M nionahela and Alleqhenv rivers at Pittsburgh, is 959 miles in length. In its nas?;iLre to the Mi.sUsinni it touches the stales , f i - iinsyivania Vircinia, 0!uo, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois. It contains about one hundred islands. Its current, when very low, does not exceed two miles per hour; when at a mean height it may be estimated at three miles. Its mean width at Cincinnati is about 530 yards. The extreme range from high to low water mark, at the same pi, ice, is 58 feet. Low water mark on the Ohio, at the mouth of Mahoning or Big Beaver, is 127 feet above L.a!ce brie, or 629 feet above tide water at Albany. At tht; mouth of the Scioto, the Ohio river at low water mark is 101 feet bcloz? Lake Erie, or 4G4 feet above tide water; at Cincinnati, at low water maik, the Ohio is 133 feet below Lake Erie, or 132 feet above tide water at Albany. The dc-
scent from the mouth of the Scioto, in the Ohio river, a distance of 322 miles, has an average of 0,71 of a foot per mile. From the mouth of the Scioto to Cincinnati, a distance of 105 miles the average is 0,30 of a foot permiile; and deducting the falls at Louisville (25.86 feet,) from
Cincinnati to the Balize at the mouth of the Mississippi, a distance of 1562 miles, there is an average descent of 0,259 of a foot ner mile. If the tide water at Al bany be on a level with the tide water of the Gulf of Mexico, the entire descent from the mouth of the Mahoning river, to the mouth of the Mississippi, is 692 feet, and fiom Cincinnati to the same point, 432 feet. The Oiiio meanders in a south-west direction, and empties into the Mississippi 3 deg. 26 min. south of Pittsburgh. The navigation of this beautiful stream is general!) suspended for six or eight weeks of each winter by the ice. Its only considerable falls are at Louisville. Rivers. The principle mcrs which empty into the Ohio, are Big Beaver, Muskingum, llockhockmg, bcioto, and the Little and Great Miamies. Those that are tributary to Lake Erie, are Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Black, Huron, Sandusky, Portage, and Maumce. The navigable water communication of the stale, on the completion of the canals now in progress, will exceed 1,700 miles upon which her products may be embarked at certain periods of the year in boats for foreign markets. Of the extent of navigable w ater, the Ohio river affords 420 miles; Lake Erie, 200; Big and Little Miamies, 25; Scioto, 100; Hockhocking, 50; Mu-kingum, and its tributaries, Whitewoman, Killbuck, Mohican, and Wills' creek, 166; Sandusky bay and river, 36; Maumee and its tributaries, 260; Ohio and Miami canals, 385. The principal harbors on the southern shore of Lake Erie, within the limits of Ohio are at Maumee ba) , Sandu?ky city, Grand river, Cleaveland, and Ashtabula creek and at the mouth of Grand river, and at the entrance of Sandusky bay there are light houses. Shop prices. Ii is the practice of near ly fill the mechanics and merchants in making sales in the first instance, to ask too high price:, in order to gue themselves room to fall, and induce buyers to purchase at lower, if they will not at higher rates. This gives occasion to a deal of higgling with some, and causes !os to others who do not undertake to cheapen what they buy. By this practice, those who have leisure (being generally the rich and idle,) obtain commodities at lus.s prices than those who have to labor for subsistence atai consequently have nut leisure to higgle about prices. lVrsons are frequently unacquainted with the cost or value of articles they buy, and give too much, and more than a lair profit to the dealer; whereas others having better information, and more time to spend in chaffering, get similar articles at such reduced prices as to leave less than a fair profit to the dealer. This manner m ikes it necessary for one to call at a number of shops and cheapen, chaffer, and hig gle, before he makes a purchase. It i.infinately troublesome to all around, to both shop keepers and purchasers. If a man, however, finds himself cheated, he marks the shop, and trades there no more. Very unfair dealers, consequently art soon deserted and succeed only lor a 4 - . ' 1-1 At I-". wiuie the tairest dealers in the on-r nin make the rnot money. Kvery man who lollows a trade, useful to the public, ought to realiz fair, but not unreasonable protis. By a Ion course of steady industry, he should be come lich. A fair and prudent course of business wail undoubtedly gradually enrich a man in tins count. 'Then whv i-iil norim.i n 1 b:i t hp c'loiilrl t.V-.iwJ rt.w! person by making him pa) ten or twen-j ty per cent more lor an article than an-!
Other? There is nothing to imtifv mnlr.iStort9 Mu'a' cirnes, Ddrr.s, r.d the frnrents
iri2j one man pay more than another, and it is u. treasonable to trade on such principles. Cincinnati JIagnct, A Long Sleep. Jane Shaw, commonly known as the Sleeping Beauty, a yourt'4 woman of prepossessing appearance, the daughter of a peasant at Aike, near Beverly, was lately in a profound slerp for 1G days, during which lime animal functions were entirely suspended, and the only symptons of life was a very feeble pulse. For a dav or two pre vious a considerable aberration of mind
nJhad been observed, and when she awoke,
she was very languid and childish, but a few days restored her to a good slate of health both of body and mind. Yorkshire Gar. What 2, arid:vhat might be. The num.oer of drunkards in the United States, would make an army as large as that with which Bonnparte marched into Russia; and would be sufficient to defend the U. S. from the combined force of all Europe. Convert drunkards into good soldiers, and one tenth of them would redeem Greece from the Turks. Convert them into Apostles, and they would christianize the world. And what are Ihfty now? Strike them from existence, and who would feel the los-? Yes, strike I hem from existence, and the United States would be benefited by thg blow.
BOOT and SHOE
in
SIGN OF THE Golden JBoof, A few doors North East from the Indiana Hotel, LA IVREYCEB UR GIL My H'ip u'li frul it on High Street; My work it fi's bo h sv.vg and r.zut; And my materials r? fit st rate, F.qiul fo ny in the State; M zivrkmsn are of he first stampj Kqual to any that di tramp. I et my stock fr m P.hilur.iGc'ink Tn quality's hebtss 1 tbnk: 1 h-- Morocco, Sea!, and Caf stein; Hujf. K d Prune!!, and eTerlaS'irg Cowii.d , J nsoal jnd Sk.rting P'enyt An i evrrj vlui.g1 that can content, ye, Kxctp. k rr! of useful trush, TftU r. oi of eril rr.an calls csu. If g mrt-u-dy you'll condescend, Anl here our patronage extend. You'll always find m.-- at my post, Strength. neatness, fashion, all the toast. This I conceive your best expedient, And shall remain nur m s obedient, ISAAC PROTZMAN. April 21. 1827. ,5-tf REMOVAL. I have often aeen fashions made of clay, But n V r a fashion nade in a day JAMES Ii. GRAVES KSPtCTFULl Y informs hs tn. i ris nd the Ct rmoltc, h a' ht hs removed his TMLOR SHOP on H ;gh ti e, o .e door above Dr. Packard's Apothec ary shop, and nearly t ppostte A Sr. Clair a Law Offi i, where he is now ready to rcmm-d-ite ive who m-y call on him for Fashionable or uny rvher Clothes on s reasons I- urn., . 'he fashion ot 'he timt-s will &!nvt. Thankful fr tlit- liberal tmcur- nunt h?rew tore rt e vfd, ht toli-M's ntii unc? f --heir f 'Vcr, assu .1 g hst his wotis shah i.ji be inferior io nv im i ti tbr ".ate. April 28, 1827. 1G tf. To Rent or Sell. ttVILL re .t or ? my laig Brjck Tavern S sntl in h- k wr of lwrt-nreourjrh, siTu. tut on Lot No 16 )t h: "he cointr f ik.;M st d Xw srefts, .eiu.-en ll Rn S'leet m.d Mr. J hn tlihson's War. h us- . B-irgr t!u nvures' public owse to the Stt.m Ld.ip. nd havng theadvantage i f ; 'wo sttiij Pi zza, whi: h cm nunds a bt-uu'iful prcspi-ct -f 'he river, it m be h id to be rr-ost -onv nVr.t'y situated TAPER.X STAXD in the plce. I witi rt at ih j.. . ve n.mrd prftn rr.s, and for ar. le o- h (Sea nn miirlf n.tr If rme time that may jut the r.or.v-hience of the r-n4t-and any pt-rso:- wishing t( par hs.se will fi' dtn? piym-nt h'trvl. If I d n ? sell or rer.tt . or.tmui' 10 k ; p t public housf , is hert-tvf -re, and shall toi(f-vor 'o acctimmodiit all 'liose who rrny give ;nc a Call. JOHN SIT.NCER. April 14. lSi. 1-i N. O. I kave so much unsettled husress to it r.d to is the cause fjr wishir.g to rnt mv ious. j s. TIenry A. I: eeth F.SrECT FULLY toi iTiv. r cm-' ome: forms his friends t-nd J 1 tonTiir ci-'cmers, ihar he has 'rturnetl o strec. on. do h,low k , sn ,nd Gs, u ih.romfurmeiiyocip.ed . Silver Sm. h Sh..p. h- re lu- inun-s k! ,pmg on hand a con Hti.ni snpnlv f I1iwreric-hti'-Kh m.d opened his sh' p on hgr. Saddles, Bridles, and Harness ot i I? km h, ii t.if ocsr otiilrv . --Met ul.h he (tTcrs low f,,;- V sr., W!rsk , F .air ivy thr barrel, or L'.if. ; tht mirk" pi:;.'. I! his ptoruri d tt t ex'hjs.vc- r-pht r liis o:.t t crick ng Mix-r's patent SPRINT. s,I)I)I.K-:, whi h in poirt it r ise and :ur tae.y -mo- e surpassfel in 'he U's'tr car.Hrv, i-i vh-ni (hf, cn he procured. If fi errs h.ms. If 'hat l.p rm pive pr:uTal s'is rti- r. ;..-se who rrid fiV.T him ei o. is Lcwcnccburzh, M irdi 3 1 , 1 S QT. 12. PROTECTION - r r v O fur th- Protection insurant Co'np.:;:v ; lt.rtf rd, Com ecu u;, IT r tn jnu-. i of rach, together rh t very other suTa'ar spe cies ot property, Ajr.insi Loss or Damage by Fire. The r.-tttaof Frrmium ft'ered, art s low ps iros of any other similar institution, tn'cverv m n has now an opnornruty, far a t.A sum, tpiotect himstlf Bjjsinst the rav.s ot his d. '; sw.-tpa mwaj the i-amna of mny y-nrs I he course th- . tTie pursue in transirtinc; heir usint ss, ami in thr- adjusting and piynitnt f.f Josses 9 pri.mp- ar.d hb.-rH. For terms of rsiirunre, apphction may mie to the above named Apr-nt, wh is -mtho aztd to issue policies '.o applicants wohout dtl-v. N. fi I su hoc 3 upon rut.b0i3 and o'.her proper 'y up .i ii r i-r can ulsj be tfFcted March 10, IS:?. 9 f. wVE W-L A WR E .V CEB UR G II Tilt. - L oMjii! U ii W h:'!i to I r, t i iTl h;s friends an U:t u o , tint he has rtUtror.. from Wilnwi'g u- t th-old s;,ind t Ni-w-Law-. enci-SiUrpfi, ai t - rujj.rs 'he Id p- fin k llur a:'td LIlFU Y Hi) I KL, ht, h kepi h G. ,rgW r .vtr, v. here he wol i-e hppy to e.ili-rt.ii. I'ravtlle: s unJ sdi who may pi ssr to tavorhar . i'h Cal! bt lu tj:g -lut his jl-llow i-itas ns and gnr. au public iii p.u or.iz hm with the srnt libeialoy rliat he had f r pLssure to reive whtn formerly orupynpf h stun JAMES WATSON. March 10, 1827. 9 tf. RAGS! RAGS! fg" HE highest price in CASH or writing 11 paptr given for clean Licsa and Cotton HAGS at this otSce.
I i t
New Drug Store, AND Family Medicine Ware-house LAIYRELXCEBURGI1, la. (On High street, 2 doors above Hunt's Hotel.) DOCTOR PINCH ARD, AGKNT for the proprietors of Apothecaries Hall, Cincinnati, offers for sale unadulterated Drugs, Medicines, Chemical preparations, Patent Medicines, Paints, Dye-stuffs, Spices, &c. He uU! constantly keep for sals every srtictc that Apo he ar:es Hall can furnish, which will he s;vd it the Cincinnati CASH PRICES .- a liberal chs ount will te made to Physicians nd Mer hnn s. .Medicine Ct.ests, containing unsi!a!teraf ed medic m s, w'.th written directions how and in vrhil diseases they shall be used, will be furnish
ed families an 1 the masters cf boats cn reasonable terms. All ths valuable kinds cf Oi;iti?ic:i Is, Lini?ncni?, Plaster:, Toclh Pozvdcrs, Tinctures, Wine end Spirit Biilcrs, Jf crm Medicines, and single k)Ses of ?.l d cin, with rrritten dirtcthms haw they are to he Uktn, will be kept for 8 Ae ; AL.S'), during the si-mmi r, SODA, SEIDLITZ, and - BIG-BOyE Water. llees' U ax, clean Mustard, CInver, H'ue firass, Tirr.oihy Sted, fcnd Hc-ps, received in pa'' ment at thv- Cincinnati prices. Doctor Pinckard vVUl forrp I) a: rd w al1 pnlttsicntl rl!s in Lvr.nc bu gh and its reightcrhood. t;fare &i Hit- New Ij ug Siorc. Dr l wisl.es to ti.ke ss a s udrnl s tnyrg man who is p pani, or wishts t. prepare hici s If, for tht- s udy of medicine L..wrtncihu;h,I1i My 5, 1S27 17-tf (Cx A Journeyman Tailor WASTED. jl"IlE 5-UBSf TlHiKJi wcui-; ,ve constant ec--a p!o;men. nd lihtrnl u-pes to a poet J rssn as I 2iii?i, ifp-l,Ci : n ! e m de itcV.oKGAN V. tLS H. v ?, 7 lT-3w. A DM! A 'IS J RA 7 O R' S SALE AJVD NOTICE. j?ol fCE 13 !-reo srvp, that the personal property of Ji:rs Virc-HAS. deceased, CortU 'r:f: Cows, li-.ts s, i.utt.e. Hogs, thr one iiif f i set (.fsills besides other things, will be sold at his la-e dueltirg house, in thetewnsidpuf !anchester, n S urdy the i.6th day of May ntxf. T he Sftle ti cornmpneeat 10 o'clock A. M. a credit of three months will be given on j surr.s over three dollar?, in giving bond une s-cunty. The Administrator also gives noct at he believes tl;e estate of siid James V.uha': is solvent and r quests all persons havit g .-lnins upon the same to iie notice thereof 3 ss;gntd ny law; and ? persons owing the same to maks payment to lum imxediattly. JAMES Y A UGH AX, Administrator of James Vaughan dee'e!. Aprd cn, is2r. TAKE.V UP, W V? TIBIH, of Logan tr.wnshir, I';""" Uuniy, on he 17-h April, two ' 8tr , 1 re ,Wllvh fcLze supposed to 141 4 hards h'Rh ha on ancld ntl! hrwnded on ,t ru .r th'g! I. . Supposed to he 14 years old. Appr.-.ised tol3colUrs The otVn r, a aj- cne ytsr old S'-trir whitr- cm be fortht-nd near side h'od f.ot whitt hid on a wo.drn muzzlf, with wooden pins, Hi prevtn' it frorr su:ki g. Apprakttl t 15dliais this -.7 h day of Apiil, 18-V, by Wti inm fk.n-f-r, Lt'w ia Joliy, iud Willcughby Tibbs. Cert tid by me WII.MAM rnUXDACE, J P. Lore 7 1Q:7 THE WELL BRED HORSE Wi;. si..nA -ii: t . -i...- j.- tuvson, c;n.n.en;in on lit AJcnday in pfih tht tirs' r;;ek u 'lie tcwaof l.unnr arp!', and 'hi: 2t d wek at thest&hlf t f the tusrrtfcc-r rear "d so on fan.-p r' ev h ai.err.atn s-jv son. For Idi:rec :mdn.nicuia:s, s-f- hai d-buls JOHN GODLF.Y. ternary 24. 1027 7 it. Millinery & 3Iantau Making BU SIXES S. 'r s. y.t ..- vVk 44k Q Li ,,Cr. SPECTFUL. L.Y intorrr.s thr Lames ot l.-;vrmrtburgh ant: tts vicinity, tht s,ht- r.is rtc-nt!v r turned from Cnmnati to h3 plice, where she intends earrv.r.cr on tbe shove bu:r.ess in a!l i's branches. Leghorn r:atst Zfjijn, A?rar and Velvet bonnits, ru , iUsdt x'.-, ar.d trimmtd, in the ir.ost .-.-t and shi".naMe style, and on the shortest nstire Ilonr.cis a cs.'sre cr x?hitev.ed, if I'Sir.-d Ladies ILcits cr JJratejb, C'iHJrs Hats, w,U also be m.de on pphcatior., in the greatest vsrifty s.nd newest and most approved manner. Residence opposite to Mr. Gncs Inn. r.d in V'.r room iiTimedistf ly over Mr. Erastus 1 ous mis y's Store, f!;ch street, Lawrcncebu'-prh. March 17, 1S27. 10. STRAY MARE. residents cf Lup;hery township, hr-nsr called unoa sw rn tn appraise an tstray MA'E, tken up (y bTi-rarv Iturcr., in L-uphcry townsh p, s'ate 'ha the mre is h br-rjlit sorrel, boh land and : tr for- tcrt-t white, white snpem the face, some s .ddl- rnaiks rn.uks of thr gears; ro m-iks or rands perceivable about fourteen hands high ,h mm four y ara old this spring. Apprised, t gC8 t'O by Y l'ci Kerr i.d Snford Carbaugh. I r r- ly the above to be a true copy fft m my tr h k lWL WMli IILOiEW. J p. Aurora, April 23, 1327. 1G 3w, OF ALL XLXDS A EA J LY EXECUTED AT THIS OFFICE
